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Roger Kotoske's Untitled
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Roger Kotoske's Untitled
Take Me There Maybe Later
  • Title

    Ancient Colorado; Triceratops Swamp

  • Artist

    Jan Vriesen and Kirk Johnson

  • Location

    Colorado Convention Center

  • Neighborhood

    Central Business District

  • Year

    2005

  • Artwork Type

    Acrylic Paintings

  • Material

    acrylic

What People Are Saying

  • 10 people say Photogenic

  • 4 people say Hidden Gem

  • 3 people say Thought Provoking

  • 3 people say Love it

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Ancient Colorado; Triceratops Swamp
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About This Piece

Triceratops Swamp
Marshall Mesa
68 million years ago

Three-horned dinosaurs aptly called Triceratops foraged in Colorado swamps during the Cretaceous Period. Similar swamps exist today along the U.S. Gulf Coast—minus the dinosaurs. The first known Triceratops fossil was discovered in a creek bank in downtown Denver in the late 1880s, with many more found over time. 

The Laramie Formation lies 500 feet beneath the Colorado Convention Center. It rises to the surface near Boulder, where it is exposed at Marshall Mesa. The remains of Cretaceous swamp forests form into deposits of underground coal, which was once mined at several Boulder-area locations.